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ABOUT THIS BOOK

PUBLISHER: Penguin Books Ltd

FORMAT: Paperback / softback

ISBN: 9780241993958

RRP: £9.99

PAGES: 400

PUBLICATION DATE:
March 9, 2023

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Companion piece: The new novel from the Booker-shortlisted author of How to be both

THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLERThe unmissable new work from Ali Smith, following the dazzling Man Booker-shortlisted Seasonal quartetOne day in post-Brexit, mid-pandemic Britain, artist Sandy Gray receives an unexpected phone call from university acquaintance Martina Pelf. Martina is calling Sandy to ask for help with a mysterious question she’s been left with after she’s spent half a day locked in a room by border control officials for no reason she can fathom:’Curlew or curfew? You choose.’And what’s any of this got to do with the story of a young and talented blacksmith hounded from her trade and her home more than five hundred years ago?Ali Smith’s novel takes wing, soaring between our atomised present and our medieval past in the hope we can open our locked down homes and selves to all the other times, other species, other histories, other possibilities.'[An] entertaining and expert portrayal of the world we live in, seen by the most beguiling and likeable of novelistic intelligences’ Telegraph'[Companion piece] makes you look at the world afresh. For me, it turned a cold and depressing day into a bright one’ New StatesmanLONGLISTED FOR THE GORDON BURN PRIZE 2022

Reviews of Companion piece: The new novel from the Booker-shortlisted author of How to be both

Superb, radical, remarkable — Mohsin Hamid * New York Times * A lockdown story of wayward genius… Lyrical visions alternate with fables and farce, history with Covid, in the scheme-busting fifth part of Smith's seasonal quartet — Lucy Hughes-Hallett * The Guardian * Scintillating… Companion Piece, like life, is messy, funny, sad, beautiful and mysterious — Alex Preston * Observer * A glorious, entertaining and expert portrayal of the world we live in, seen by the most beguiling and likeable of novelistic intelligences * Telegraph * Both a standalone novel and a coda to her Seasonal quartet, Ali Smith's latest, set during the pandemic, offers a wise and humane voice for perilous times * Financial Times * Smith's way of telling a story – looping in time; switching from one fast-flicking consciousness to another; tying up radically different periods of history in a single place – and her amused delight in the flexibilities of language feel not only modernist but, better than that, modern . . . Companion Piece is very funny. It makes you look at the world afresh. For me, it turned a cold and depressing day into a bright one * The New Statesman *

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